Data Fines, Dark Patterns & Drone Bans: This Week’s Wildest Tech Power Plays (S4) Year Finale

Data Fines, Dark Patterns & Drone Bans: This Week’s Wildest Tech Power Plays (S4) Year Finale

58:33 Dec 27, 2025
About this episode
Got it—let’s tighten this exactly how you asked. Below is a scripted paragraph intro you can read on air, then one catchy paragraph per bullet point, all referencing the short point titles you already wrote. No extra structure, just what you read. Podcast intro (read on air) This is The JMOR Tech Talk Show with John C. Morley, Serial Entrepreneur, Engineer, Marketing Specialist, Video Producer, Podcast Host, Coach, graduate student and lifelong learner. In this Season 4 year finale, “Data Fines, Dark Patterns & Drone Bans: This Week’s Wildest Tech Power Plays,” we’re diving into the stories that quietly decide how safe your data is, how honest your apps are, and why everything from drones to kids’ toys and ATMs suddenly has an AI angle. If you’ve ever wondered who really pays when a company gets hacked, what happens when regulators finally say “enough,” or why upgrading your PC costs more every month, stay tuned—because this week’s headlines are about to land right in your living room. SK Telecom hit with massive breach payouts. South Korea isn’t just scolding SK Telecom for its giant data breach; it’s putting an actual cash value on every victim, forcing payouts that could total into the billions. That flips the script from “we’re sorry for the inconvenience” to “your privacy has a price—and we’re paying it.” The big question is whether this becomes the global blueprint that finally makes other telcos and tech giants think twice before treating security as an afterthought. ​ TikTok U.S. spun into Oracle-led JV. TikTok may have dodged the nuclear option of a full U.S. ban, but being carved into an Oracle‑led joint venture creates a strange split personality for the app. One version plays by Washington’s rules while the rest of the world keeps using the original formula that made it explode. Creators and brands now have to ask if their U.S. audience will slowly get a watered‑down TikTok while YouTube Shorts and Reels circle for the global crown. Shein escapes shutdown, faces strict fines. Shein avoided having its doors slammed shut in France, but it didn’t walk away clean; judges slapped it with strict obligations and painful fines over harmful and illegal products instead of a full three‑month blackout. That move signals that regulators want to keep consumers’ cheap options alive while making the platforms truly accountable. For Shein, every “too good to be true” listing now carries not just a PR risk, but a legal bill. AI-written phishing targets Russian defense. Phishing used to give itself away with bad spelling and goofy formatting; now AI can crank out flawless fake government memos aimed straight at high‑value targets like Russian defense contractors. A pro‑Ukrainian group is proving that anyone with a decent model can scale social engineering like a SaaS product. It’s a preview of a future where the difference between a real letter and a weaponized one is almost impossibl
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